J&K: Leaders Criticise Move to Drop ‘Sher-e-Kashmir’ from Conference Centre’s Name

The title was used attributed to former chief minister Sheikh Abdullah and the centre has been used as a subsidiary prison since August last year.

New Delhi: The move by the Jammu and Kashmir administration to drop the ‘Sher-e-Kashmir’ title from the famous eponymous conference centre in Srinagar has been criticised by politicians Mohammad Yousuf Tarigami, a CPI(M) leader, and former Union minister Saifuddin Soz.

The Sher-e-Kashmir International Conference Centre (SKICC) will now simply be called as the Kashmir International Conference Centre. The title ‘Sher-e-Kashmir’ is attributed to the erstwhile state’s former chief minister, Sheikh Abdullah.

The conference centre, which is located on the banks of the Dal Lake, has played host to a number of international and national conferences. After the Centre’s decision to dilute Article 370 in August last year, the centre was turned into a subsidiary. Politicians such as People’s Conference chairman Sajad Lone, PDP leader Naeem Akhtar, National Conference leader Ali Mohammad Sagar and bureaucrat-turned-politician Shah Faesal were among those held at the centre.

In a statement, CPI(M) leader Tarigami said dropping the Sher-e-Kashmir title is an “attack on the history of J&K”. The move attempts to undermine the contribution of the leadership headed by Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah, who preferred secular India over Pakistan by rejecting the two-nation theory, he said.

“Sher-e-Kashmir is not just a title but a glorious chapter of history in Jammu and Kashmir. We might have difference with Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah but that doesn’t mean we should undermine his and his colleagues’ historic role which they played right from their advent on the political scene,” the statement reads.

He said the contribution of the ‘Quit Kashmir Movement’ led by Sheikh Abdullah for the upliftment of the people and “revolutionary changes” in the agrarian and education sectors laid the foundation of ‘Naya Kashmir’. This idea has been under attack since the BJP came to power at the Centre, especially after the August 5 decision last year, Tarigami said.

He also recollected that July 13, observed as Martyr’s Day and on the birth anniversary of Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah, has been dropped as a public holiday. This, when seen in conjunction with removing the title of ‘Sher-e-Kashmir’ from the state award and police medal, “exposes the dubious stand of the BJP time and again. BJP can welcome with open arms any body when it feels its need but will not hesitate in punishing him/her, when it opposes their disastrous policies”.

“We cannot look at the emerging situation in isolatation. That will only amount to playing in the hands of those working behind the scene and aiming at disrupting our unity. The time demands all of us to stand together at this crucial juncture of our history and safeguard the interests of our people,” the statement concludes.

Saifuddin Soz, former Union minister and Congress leader, said that the people of Kashmir never changed the names of old institutions, as they were part of history. “So, Hari Parbat, Jogi Lankar, Amar Singh College, Sri Pratap College, SMHS Hospital, Vishwa Bharti College, Gandhi Memorial College and dozens of other titles of institutions have continued to be the same,” he said.

He said that the current administration, “even though, it is an intermediary arrangement before elections”, continues to change the names of institutions when it does not have the mandate.

“We know very well that we have fallen to the very bad times; but, we did not know that the government has become so impatient to impair every element of our identity, before it completes its tenure,” he said.

‘Slowly Dying’: J&K CPI(M) MLA Yousuf Tarigami Rips Into Centre

Tarigami is the first prominent politician from the Kashmir Valley who has been able to speak to the media.

New Delhi: In his first public appearance after the Supreme Court relaxed his house arrest, Mohammad Yousuf Tarigami, the four-time CPI(M) MLA from Kulgam in Jammu and Kashmir, hit out at the Union government’s claims of normalcy in the Kashmir Valley. 

“Forty days have passed since the clampdown was imposed. There is no internet, no telephone; hardly any shop is opening; the hospitals are reporting of medicine shortage; schools and colleges have remained shut. Yet, the government claims that everything is normal,” he said at a press conference, asking reporters whether everything would have been deemed ‘normal’ had there been such a lockdown in the national capital. 

Commenting on the Centre’s move to dilute Article 370 and bifurcate the state into two Union Territories, he said, “The very foundations of unity between the Indian union and J&K was assaulted by those who are mandated to protect the Indian Constitution.”

Also read | Detained Kashmiri CPI(M) Leader Yusuf Tarigami to Be Moved to AIIMS from Srinagar: SC

Speaking at the CPI(M) headquarters in the national capital on Tuesday, he said that the people of Kashmir feel betrayed by the Union government’s decision which was taken without any “discussion and debate”. 


“The government has forgotten that the people of Kashmir had refused to listen to the diktats of Pakistan and had decided to join secular India when Maharaja Hari Singh himself was dilly-dallying on his decision,” he said, adding that “those bonds” have now been severed. 

“India is also my country. I am not a foreigner. Take us along with us. An average Kashmiri does not want anything else from the Union government. Just listen to them,” he appealed to the Union government, adding that there is a ‘trust deficit’ between people of Kashmir and the Indian establishment. 

He said that the only “moments of freedom” he has enjoyed in the last 40 days were in New Delhi and not in his hometown, Srinagar. “I have seen horrible days in Kashmir, but never have they been this worse,” he added. 

Also read: CPI(M) Leader Tarigami Can Go Back to J&K, Says Supreme Court

“Despite the lockdown, the government has been saying koi mara toh nahin na (no one died, no?). Arey, mar rahe hai, dheere dheere mar rahe hai. Ghutan ho rahi hai wahan (We are dying, dying a slow death. There is suffocation there in the valley),” Tarigami said, adding that the government should give Kashmiris a reason and opportunity to live.

He said that the Centre’s decisions have only “humiliated” Kashmiri people and “mobilised those who want to destabilise Kashmir”, hinting at the fact that the separatists and pro-Pakistan groups in the valley may get more room to advance their propaganda. 

Tarigami is the first prominent politician from Kashmir valley who got a chance to speak freely to the media. The others are still in detention and have been refused any access to the media. 

CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury, who was present at the presser, said that Tarigami has fought terrorism in the valley all his life, and has even lost his family members in the process. 

“Yet, leaders like him have been put under detention,” he said. 

Yechury thanked the team of lawyers led by senior advocate Raju Ramachandran who had filed a habeas corpus petition on behalf of Yechury to get Tarigami out of house arrest.  

Following the apex court’s order, Tarigami was permitted to visit New Delhi’s AIIMS for treatment. On September 16, the apex court ruled that Tarigami was free to go back to Srinagar, his hometown, whenever he wishes to. The decision on the writ petition that questions Tarigami’s detention, however, is still pending at the court. 

Kashmiris walk past broken window glass after clashes between protesters and the security forces on Friday evening, during restrictions following the scrapping of the special constitutional status for Kashmir by the government, in Srinagar August 17, 2019. Photo: Reuters/Danish Ismail

Yechury said that Tarigami would soon file a petition against the Centre’s decision to dilute Article 370 and “reorganise the state of Jammu and Kashmir.”

“It is clear that the ground situation (in J&K) is completely contradictory to what the government is claiming,” Yechury said.

“The move has completely insulated and isolated people of Kashmir. We believe that things can only be ‘normal’ only when people’s lives are normal,” he said. 

Commenting on the slapping of the Public Safety Act on the National Conference leader Farooq Abdullah, he said the government used the draconian act only as an “afterthought”. 

“His father Sheikh Abdullah, Farooq himself, and his son Omar are the most ardent supporters of Kashmir’s integration into India. It was only when a habeas corpus petition moved against his illegal detention, the government thought of the PSA.”

“It is a very wrong thing to do. From August 5 (when Centre announced its decisions) till yesterday, there was no charge against him. And suddenly, he is being seen as a threat to public safety,” Yechury said. 

He said as far as CPI(M) is concerned, its “fight against terrorism is non-negotiable.” 

For Kashmiris, Continued Dialogue With Centre the Only Way Forward, Finds Citizens Delegation

The Yashwant Sinha-led delegation of “concerned citizens” has in its report observed that there is anger among the people due to India’s refusal to recognise Kashmir as a politically contentious issue.

The Yashwant Sinha-led delegation of “concerned citizens” has in its report observed that there is anger among the people due to India’s refusal to recognise Kashmir as a politically contentious issue.

Yashwant Sinha-led delegation winds up Kashmir visit. Credit: Twitter

Yashwant Sinha-led delegation winds up Kashmir visit. Credit: Twitter

A five-member delegation of “concerned citizens” – led by former union minister Yashwant Sinha and facilitated by the Centre for Dialogue and Reconciliation (CDR) – visited Srinagar in October to reach out to its people in the wake of the violence that has plagued the state since the recent uprising. The delegation even managed to reach out to hardline Hurriyat Conference leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani and in its report observed that while almost everyone the delegation spoke to “argued for a political solution” to what they perceived to be a “political issue”, there was also a great deal of anger for a variety of reasons.

The delegation comprised former chief information commissioner and former chairman of the National Minorities Commission Wajahat Habibullah, former Air Vice Marshal Kapil Kak, senior journalist Bharat Bhushan and executive program director of CDR, Sushobha Barve. They said, “Kashmiris believe that today, Indian politics has taken such a turn that there is no willingness to even listen to demands for autonomy. Today, the Kashmir issue is being seen as Hindu vs Muslim and governance is seen as Jammu vs Kashmir.”

Need for dialogue

The group also noted that “an overwhelming sentiment among the Kashmiris” was for “setting up a permanent process of dialogue with New Delhi.”

Having managed to reach out to more groups in the Valley than the all-party delegation headed by  home minister Rajnath Singh had in September, the group said, “One of the reasons why so many doors were opened for us by separatists and ordinary Kashmiris alike, was because they saw our visit as a beginning of engagement with ordinary Indians.” Since the agenda of the alliance between the BJP-PDP coalition government in the state also commits to a dialogue with all the stakeholders, it therefore recommended that “such a dialogue is initiated at the earliest”.

Stating that it was not “limited to any ideology or institution and was not sponsored by anyone”, the group has noted in the report that “no security or financial help was accepted from any institution or government body to ensure that the integrity of the group as concerned citizens was maintained.”

The group said that it met Hurriyat leader Geelani twice at his residence. It also met Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, Abdul Ghani Bhat and Shabbir Shah and held consultations with representatives of the Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Kashmir Economic Alliance, the Kashmiri Pandit Sangharsh Samiti, the High Court Bar Association and also with academics, writers, journalists and doctors.

The delegation also had a dinner meeting with chief minister Mehbooba Mufti and met mainstream political leaders like Farooq Abdullah, Saifuddin Soz and Yousuf Tarigami who, it said, were supportive of the initiative.

Coming to its “basic findings”, the delegation said people generally spoke of reaching a “political solution” and it was pointed out that “this is the fifth generation of Kashmiris which is protesting but to no avail”.

Anger both short and long term

As for the reasons behind the current unrest, the delegation was apprised that it was due to both “immediate anger and the long term anger”. The immediate anger was primarily due to “excessive use of force by the security forces”, which has left over 100 dead since July 8 when the violence began in the state following the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani.

Another reason for the prevalent anger has been the “use of pellet guns” for crowd control, which the delegation said, was the “sorest point” of all conversation with Kashmiris. “They want the pellet guns banned and cannot understand why the government of India is delaying this decision and why Indian security establishment is reluctant to give up this weapon,” it pointed out.

The delegation also referred to how the use of pellet guns has led to eye injuries to a lot of people, including innocent civilians. People in Kashmir have been wondering why they were being used on them when they were not used on protesters during the Jat agitation in Haryana, the protests during the Cauvery water sharing issue in Karnataka or in the Patel agitation in Gujarat.

When it raised the related issue of “stone pelting”, the delegation said most Kashmiri leaders denied that youngsters were being paid to throw stones. “They claimed that this was being done in ‘self-defence’ by unarmed people protesting against India.”

Another sore point has been the “night time raids by security forces”, which the people claimed had “resulted in the destruction of property at Kashmir homes”. One reason the delegation heard was “because the security forces get pelted with stones while returning to camp in the evening, they go back at night in anger to take revenge. That revenge in the form of wanton destruction of property to punish the people.”

Minors also victims of PSA misuse

People also spoke about the “misuse of the Public Safety Act (PSA)the Public Safety Act (PSA)” which, the delegation observed, “is seen as a revolving door process by the Kashmiris to keep people in jail.” It said this “draconian law” was brought into being by Sheikh Abdullah to deal with timber smugglers and thus does not require the victim to be produced before a magistrate and which allows a person charged under the Act to be kept in custody for up to a year. Now, it is being used to keep trouble-makers in jail for longer than a year. “As they are released in one case, another one under PSA is slapped on them in a different police jurisdiction.”

“However, the major misuse of the PSA is against minors. The amended Juvenile Justice Act for the state does not allow the police to arrest minors under PSA. Yet this has happened on a significant scale,” the delegation pointed out. They added that while the separatist leaders put the figure at about 6,000, the government sources put it at 2,500. Even more worrisome, it said was that “there are no juvenile homes or Borstals for confining minors in J&K, so they are kept with hardened criminals which can have a long-term deleterious impact on the minors imprisoned.”

It was also alleged that people from the Valley are being housed in jails in Jammu, against a Supreme Court order.

People in the state are also angry at the “destruction of electric transformers and crops in rural areas”, allegedly by the security forces and charged that “this is again apparently aimed at punishing villagers for either pelting stones at them or protesting against them.”

Emotional and sentimental issue

According to the delegation, there have also been a number of long-term reasons behind the anger of the people in Kashmir. Much of the anger, they said, rose from a belief among most that India has refused to recognise Kashmir as a politically contentious issue and has failed to recognise the emotional and sentimental aspects of the Kashmir issue. Also, the delegation learnt that people were angry because they felt that India has failed to see the psycho-historical aspects of the Kashmir problem and has often tried to reduce it to issues like lack of development or economic growth, a need to create jobs which it has believed will be solved by offering economic packages and incentives. “This has not suppressed the sense of hurt among the Kashmiri people or quelled their political aspirations because these measures do not address the political issue of Kashmir.”

Stop branding people ‘Pakistani puppets’

Other reasons for the anger that has brewed over the years include the belief that all Kashmiris are thought of as “Pakistani puppets”. They said, “Everything that happens in the Valley is being seen through the prism of Pakistan and that this is being done to deny that they are free agents who are raising their own issues with India.” The same argument, people said, was used to equate every protesting Kashmiri with a terrorist and their leadership – especially the Hurriyat Conference – being treated as extremists, when in fact it was organised as a political face of a peaceful protest movement.

According to the delegation, the people argued that “there is a need to recognise that Kashmiris are upset and that there is a sentiment for azaadi”.  If they picked up the Pakistani and Chinese flags, it was not because they wanted to solicit support from these countries but because “they know that this riles India”. And they want to rile India because it does not listen to them.

Kashmiri separatist leaders have also said that unless India and Pakistan talk, there can be no permanent solution to the Kashmir issue. The delegation said “most Kashmiris believe that Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee was sincere in his approach to resolving the Kashmir tangle. They quoted him as saying that Kashmir is an issue which needs to be resolved, and even if Kashmiris want to distance themselves, that has to be done through “cooperation and goodwill.”

There was also a widespread belief that the “Indian public is indifferent to the plight of Kashmiris. This, they believe, is because they have been conditioned and encouraged to view the developments in Kashmir through anti-Pakistan glasses.”

Pandits want parity and security

As for the Kashmiri Pandits living in the Valley, the delegation said they “want to be treated at par with Kashmiri migrants and be given same benefits as them because in a sense, they are also migrants who have shifted from the original villages to towns. This had been agreed to by the former prime minister Manmohan Singh but never implemented.”

The delegation also said that Kashmiri Pandits fear the due to the withdrawal of forces from certain areas their own security might be compromised. As such, of the remaining 850 Pandit families in the state, about 350 families are planning to migrate.

Reopen school, postpone exams

In light of all these findings, the delegation has suggested that the state government begin reopening schools and releasing forthwith, all first-time offenders who are school children and minors arrested under PSA. It has also called for considering postponing school examinations instead of holding them from November 15. It has also called for psychological counselling for repeat offenders and has suggested shifting them to juvenile detention centres.

Compensate and rehabilitate victims

The group has also suggested that the next of kin of the civilians killed or wounded in police be compensated. In addition it asked the government to consider announcing rehabilitation packages for those permanently blinded by pellet guns and free treatment for those who have been partially blinded by pellet guns. Furthermore, it suggested setting up a school for the blind in Srinagar and ordering a judicial commission to look into the excesses by the police, especially the wanton use of pellet guns.

From the Centre, the group has urged an immediate ban on pellet guns. It also asked the government to sensitise the media about the delicate nature of the Kashmir issue so that the situation is not flared in search of viewers and revenue.

The Centre has also been asked to “dispel the perception that Kashmir and Kashmiris are mere tools to be used for electoral purposes,” and reiterate that “Kashmiris are Indians”. It was also asked to “move quickly to give facilities of migrants to Pandits continuing to reside in Kashmir division of J&K.”